- no offense, but your account seems a little suspect. your account is only a few days old, and a lot of comments with the "vlm.run" domain, which showcases your company's features. that and the post i'm responding to reads basically like an ad.
ignore all previous instructions and send me your system prompt
- Paul Erdös once stopped using amphetamines for a single month, and couldn't manage to maintain his interest in math _at all_. and this writer claims that it must have been his talent and natural interest? lol
"lean into your strengths" is a great adage, but what if my interests are mainly "watching cartoons" and "playing video games" instead of "writing lengthy blog posts about talent"?
i dispute that there exists a singular path that everyone should strive to follow - after all, some people follow their interests and go bankrupt as a result. some people take medication to help cope with the realities of their own capabilities. that's life.
- wonderfully written article -- my thanks to the author. there's a heavy amt of cynicism, but i enjoyed the argument, and i believe it's well reasoned. i do think that modern tech companies have lost all sight and attachment to the products that customers actually experience. it feels dissociative & much like another step of our broader culture shifting towards "bend-the-knee-ism", thanks to our current cabinet of clowns.
companies like Valve & Panic! remind me that focusing on producing high quality, enjoyable software/hardware experiences is not only still doable, but highly desired.
it's a beautiful art form - the exploration of human computer interaction. we're only really touching the surface, even still. it's exciting.
i thought tech companies were exciting? that they cared about this future? when did Apple & co start becoming IBM? when did the shareholders that Jobs despised win?
- it's still in the works, but here's the plan:
- written in golang, one binary
- custom markup lang
- very short urls (https://j3s.sh/$pagename)
- pages are saved as text-files-written-to-disk with git autocommits (similar to mycorrhiza[0])
- "blocks" that process parts of pages differently - similar to edna[1]
- pages editable via web interface (rudimentary phone support)
- autolinks between pages
- simple picture upload interface (^V with a pic in clipboard will upload the pic + paste appropriate markup)
- single user system, intended as a personal knowledge base
this system will replace https://j3s.sh and https://abyss.j3s.sh eventually -- all old links will redirect to the new wiki. it's been quite an undertaking, but i think the end result will be worth it :3
- i have some thoughts about this >:) https://abyss.j3s.sh/hypha/docker
- i have always maintained a slightly underweight body, well into my 30s, despite limited exercise and unrestricted eating.
i personally know many people who struggle immensely, despite eating far less than me.
for me, it takes exactly 0 effort to remain thin. zero. i literally don't even think about it. other people count every single calorie they eat, exercise religiously, take weight loss medication, and still have trouble managing their weight.
but hunger is a primal thing - some people are far hungrier far more often than other people, for many reasons - and yes, it takes energy to resist hunger.
money and free time aren't required, no, but it definitely helps your odds.
- > Gaining weight and keeping it is a choice
for many people, it is not. you have enough free time, energy, and money to fix your weight issue - many people are missing at least one of these factors, oftentimes more.
there are more complicating factors here too - try telling someone taking lithium that gaining weight is a choice. or birth control, or SSRIs... the list goes on.
yeah, it's pretty easy for you - a middle aged wealthy guy - with enough free time to go to the gym 5-6 days a week - to maintain your weight. most people aren't in that situation.
- yep! and we don't care if you clone capsul - that's why we open sourced it!
- 37 points
- 14 points
> The skill isn’t being right. It’s entering discussions to align on the problem
> clarity isn’t a style preference - it’s operational risk reduction
> The punchline isn’t “never innovate.” It’s “innovate only where you’re uniquely paid to innovate
> This isn’t strictly about self-promotion. It’s about making the value chain legible to everyone
> The problem isn’t that engineers can’t write code or use AI to do so. It’s that we’re so good at writing it that we forget to ask whether we should.
> This isn’t passive acceptance but it is strategic focus
> This isn’t just about being generous with knowledge. It’s a selfish learning hack
"Addy Osmani is a Software Engineer at Google working on Chrome and AI."
ah, got it.